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16:00
@BartekBanachewicz newVel = if isTopRight posVec || isBottomLeft posVec then -oldVel else oldVel
@Jefffrey you can't work on both X and Y
you are supposed to flip only one coordinate
How so?
Oh I see
user1804599
It should optimise it into a lookup table.
I would probably abstract that logic (of keeping things in bounded areas) in another function then.
I wanted to just inplace modify the velocity
but for some fucked up reason I'm getting this Const error
16:03
And even then I would probably use oldVel * vec2 (-1) 1 instead of that mess
2 mins ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
@Jefffrey you can't work on both X and Y
...
@BartekBanachewicz I'm flipping only x there
...
You can even create a function that generates that flipping vector for you.
Then it's just oldVel * flippingVec <args>
Ell
Ell
> libGL error: failed to load driver: swrast
huh.
16:06
set and get of lenses are probably what I find useful the most
If you could simply use them with "regular records" (not lensed), maybe with some template magic, then it would be pretty awesome
updateVel :: Sehe -> Sehe
updateVel s = s & (if bounceX then vel . x %~ negate else id)
                & (if bounceY then vel . y %~ negate else id)
    where
        bounceX = outOfBounds (s ^. pos . x) (0, 1024 - 128)
        bounceY = outOfBounds (s ^. pos . y) (0, 786 - 128)
        outOfBounds v (lo, hi) = v < lo || v > hi
@Jefffrey here's a new version
@Jefffrey well, what lens template magic does is precisely that, really.
Ooh! Look at the magic numbers!
@MartinJames he's quite the magician
@BartekBanachewicz nope, lenses create Lens objects (or whatever they are actually called, Getter and Setter maybe?) and then get and set work on those. So for example pos is not a simple Sehe -> Vec2 function, it's a Getter ... ... ... object.
16:12
@Jefffrey Lens is a getter and a setter. Really, nothing else.
x :: Simple Lens Vec2 Float
x = lens getX setX

y :: Simple Lens Vec2 Float
y = lens getY setY

getX (Vec2 x _) = x
getY (Vec2 _ y) = y

setX (Vec2 x y) nx = Vec2 nx y
setY (Vec2 x y) ny = Vec2 x ny
Hey, where did my superpowers go? I used to be able to close questions single-handedly!
here, I wrote that for the sample because Data.Vect didn't have them
no template magic.
just simple functions.
And tomorrow is Valentine's day.
anyway those experiments are quite satisfying
I should think about changing transformations to use matrices though
user1804599
16:14
the day of death
@FredOverflow I have my massacre ready planned.
massacre of... romance?
well, dunno what to do at this point really
@BartekBanachewicz missing the point
@Jefffrey probably.
16:15
. <------- -------> Bartek
I mean you want records to have fields that can set too, right?
Like, by default?
@Jefffrey Getters are just functions, only CPSed.
@BartekBanachewicz I want set, get and modify that work on records without making me modifying their structure.
They should work with this too:
so you want automatic lens generation basically
without fiddling with names and calling makeLenses explicitely
data Sample =
    Sample {
        a :: Int,
        b :: String
    }
@BartekBanachewicz no, I don't want them lenses anywhere
16:18
Where a :: Simple Lens Sample Int
no lenses should be generated
@Jefffrey what's the type of a then
a :: Sample -> Int
Where's the setter?
how do you set a in a Sample?
user1804599
16:19
make lenses objects that have the function application operator overloaded for one and for two arguments
set uses record notation with template magic to modify the field
@Jefffrey show example use
user1804599
and then you can make a a lens!
@Jefffrey That's significantly less powerful.
@R.MartinhoFernandes How so?
16:19
so you mean it should, like dynamically create that setter?
holy shit
no fucking setters
a isn't a setter,but you can set a ?
I though so. I already checked it, therefore thinking about it. There is no reference on that language anywhere. Only here. So, I assumed it was made by you. For a 14 years old guy, you went really far on programming. +1000 for that! — Ismael Miguel 4 hours ago
it uses the record syntax that already exists to modify the value
Wow. I certainly didn't implement my own programming language when I was 14...
16:20
Show example setting.
@BartekBanachewicz set a 123 sample
given some sample object
@Jefffrey right a isn't a setter at all then.
just like you do with lenses
@BartekBanachewicz no
a would still be Sample -> Int
if you want to call that a setter, then please go on
(but it's not a setter)
16:21
@Jefffrey So you really only want to call getters without get, and setters with set?
the magic happens inside the functions
not in the data structure
data structure should be independent
this is the point
Lens generates getters and setters out of the data
@Jefffrey It is restricted to statically known fields.
user1804599
@Jefffrey No.
My dream-like set, get and modify would not generate anything, and work with existing data structures too
Can't compose.
user1804599
16:23
It generates them out of data types.
@R.MartinhoFernandes How so?
@райтфолд fuck you rightfold
@Jefffrey how would it work with fst?
@Jefffrey Consider nested records.
How would it work with lists?
@BartekBanachewicz set fst 1 (234, "ok")
16:23
data Sample2 =
    Sample2 {
        ab :: Sample,
        c :: String
    }
@R.MartinhoFernandes set, set (a . b . c) 123 sample should still work
so you essentially want Lens functionality but don't want to use Lens for some reason
given some nested sample object
@BartekBanachewicz just like it does already
head for example would need to work with this
yeah I'm wondering how the fuck would that work honestly
@Jefffrey That adds exceptions to the semantics I'm not comfortable with.
16:25
since head has absolutely 0 information about setting
language extension, I honestly don't know
@Jefffrey . no longer means function composition there.
@Jefffrey ah so you want Lenses to become part of the language
@BartekBanachewicz head selects a field in a data object, of course it knows everything about setting
I am not sure if I like it
16:25
@R.MartinhoFernandes yeah, that would be (.) from Category.Something
@Jefffrey except it really doesn't because it's just a getter
@BartekBanachewicz no
@Jefffrey um that seems really complicated
@Jefffrey Same. . no longer means morphism composition.
16:26
All of your idea is full of sketchy details and complicated Category composition and whatnot
It's just a syntactic hook for TH.
@R.MartinhoFernandes wait, why not?
I think I'd rather use something simpler, like Lens
@райтфолд How come nobody (except me) upvoted your Perl golf?
@Jefffrey Because it's just a syntactic hook for the TH machinery in set.
16:27
@Jefffrey because a -> b can't be composed as a setter
@R.MartinhoFernandes the first parameter to set is the selector for the object
a selector is basically just a getter
and if your selector is a regular function you can't compose it to set
@Jefffrey that's the fucking point
@BartekBanachewicz every selector is a regular function
@Jefffrey Yes, and there's no way to go from a getter to a setter.
I can write my own getter for example
16:27
a selector is just a function from Object -> TypeOfField
There are ways to get from that syntax to a setter, but that's not the same.
@R.MartinhoFernandes that's where the magic would happen
Consider a :: MyStruct -> Int; a = 0
how would that set anything
@Jefffrey No, there's no magic that can do that.
16:28
@R.MartinhoFernandes I know
@Jefffrey Wait, so it's actually just lenses in the end?
without lenses
If you make a not be just a getter, it's just lenses.
you're a funny guy jeffrey
16:29
@R.MartinhoFernandes is a selector
for a field in an object
@Jefffrey which is what a lens is precisely
just like it works already
Lens is a composable selector.
@Jefffrey Namely, what do you expect out of let abc = a . b . c in set abc?
@BartekBanachewicz point is that it's a simple function
also I need to plonk you bartek, because I can't follow a 2 vs 1 battle
16:29
@corvid don't see why you can't do that
That's what lenses deal in.
@Jefffrey except it's not, because you have yourself just said that your implementation is impossible
@Jefffrey lol, you can't follow because you set out with something that's impossible to implement and then say "see if you use that implementation it all works out"
@R.MartinhoFernandes setting the element selected by a . b . c` in the object
@Jefffrey So what's abc's type?
Sample -> Int?
what's a and c type?
16:31
Let's say c :: Something -> Int.
@R.MartinhoFernandes yes
@Jefffrey Can't work.
3 mins ago, by Jefffrey
@R.MartinhoFernandes I know
You can't expect an arbitrary function as input and be able to look through it.
16:31
look past what
3 mins ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
Consider a :: MyStruct -> Int; a = 0
@Jefffrey Oh well, go waste someone else's time, then.
the function selects the field to modify
how is this a difficult concept?
@Jefffrey No, it does not.
It produces an output given an input.
const 2 :: Sample -> Int
What does let f = const 2 :: Sample -> Int in set f do?
yeah I should've used const actually, but that's the idea
16:33
right
Functions are opaque. You can't look through them. You can call them and pass them around. That's it.
then I don't have a solution
or you can just use fucking Lens
and lenses are not a solution for me
The solution is to use pass along things that describe fields. Functions don't do that.
16:34
if I have to modify the data declaration to use them
@Jefffrey ohnoes
you actually don't because you can write them from scratch
Please do not devote my question.My intention was not to degrade anybody.I just wanted to know the reason — ZMKhan 12 mins ago
for any data you're given
lol, hate and devotion
like I did with the Vec2
16:35
um
devote doesn't mean what you think it means
you just need a setter and a getter for every field
> Hatoful Boyfriend Lovers Pillowcase
@AlexM. I was dreading the moment you'll notice
@LeeLouviere Devotion means allocating time for something important, right? :)
> Note: Worldwide shipping is included! Because these pillowcases are being made to order, shipping may take a while but is expected to occur within 3-6 months for qualifying transactions.
16:37
Like "I devoted most of my life to stack overflow instead of trying to cure cancer".
lol 3-6 months
I'd lose my boner waiting for it
almost
@Jefffrey you can ie write makeLenses so that it takes non-underscored names and adds lens or ' at the end
Your boner sleeps on a pillow?
@AlexM. Maybe a sign error in their traveling salesman, leading to the longest path instead of the shortest?
Ell
Ell
template parameters can only be integers, types or templates, is that correct?
16:39
booleans too
Ell
Ell
they can't be functions though?
@BartekBanachewicz no, following a 2 vs 1 battle is obviously exhausting for the 1 guy
@Ell They can be pointers and enum values too.
@BartekBanachewicz Can they be function pointers?
16:40
independently from if he is right or wrong
@Jefffrey but you chose to plonk me arbitrarily and that's sad
@BartekBanachewicz yes, because you were the less constructive in the discussion
@Jefffrey Just ignore Bartek's jabs that don't add anything.
@Jefffrey Bartek+Haskell vs. Jefffrey? ;)
@Jefffrey nevermind the fact I raised the const concern way before robot did
16:41
@FredOverflow just half of it ;)
Wait, there's 3 fs in your name? I never noticed before.
;) ;) ;) ;)
@BartekBanachewicz irrelevant
obtw @LightnessRacesinOrbit I visited your hometown yesterday, see?
I was wondering if I could see your house from there
16:42
@BartekBanachewicz const isn't concerning. It's arbitrary functions.
@Jefffrey anyway, yeah, you don't need to modify data decls to use lenses
@AlexM. Oh, Point-and-Click adventure? Looks nice. Which is it?
const is just a trivial example.
@FredOverflow the new broken sword (5)
@R.MartinhoFernandes yeah.
16:42
@BartekBanachewicz it doesn't matter
fields should just be that
@Jefffrey so should just be zigamorphs, or (setter,getter) pairs?
records should be rengineered, probably
on a language level
well, what until they aren't?
see, I'm actually writing code here.
I try to use the hack that Lens is as little as possible
It doesn't mean never nor always.
@Jefffrey You keep forgetting Lenses are about way more than just record fields, I think
16:44
That's all I would use them for.
get, set and modify
Well, there's a lot of way more useful things in there
And the makeField thingy (the one that generates type classes).
starting with stateful versions.
and traversals.
Don't care.
um. I think you're really just pet hating lens. At least that's what it honestly looks like.
16:45
When I'll have to solve such issues, I'll learn about traversals.
Or whatever lenses provide.
@Jefffrey have you read "programming imperatively in haskell using lenses"?
I would probably throw up reading that, so no.
your close-minded attitude is making me concerned.
2
user3010322
@sehe That Doves typeface looks really nice!
16:46
fuck
it's been ten hours and fifteen minutes and my guts still hurt.
that's a new record.
you haven't even read the article, but you already have an opinion about it.
If I want to program imperatively I use an imperative language.
@Jefffrey You know, I thought you were better than that.
epic fail
Oh boi, here we go.
16:47
what if you want to do most of your program functionally but this one little bit imperatively?
"I thought you agreed with me more"
Here we go what? That I thought you weren't nearly as ignorant?
"Now that you have a different point of view, I don't you like you anymore"
@Jefffrey You don't even have a point of view
you have a point of prejudice and hate
16:48
ITT it is required to have a point of view on everything
you didn't even need to read that article to critique it
I know I'm not perfect when it comes to that either, but really it's not about disagreement
I value the fact that you disagree with me a lot
no you're right
it's about stfu you two
I didn't criticized it at all.
3 mins ago, by Jefffrey
I would probably throw up reading that, so no.
Yes, that tell me that I don't agree with the point the title is trying to make.
16:50
@AlexM. Ah, it's called "Baphomet's Curse" in Germany.
Not that the article is bad.
@Jefffrey It's not trying to make any point.
It's showing how to program imperatively in Haskell.
@BartekBanachewicz What's the purpose of a title?
@Jefffrey to tell you what's in the article
@BartekBanachewicz And I don't care about doing that.
16:51
@Jefffrey see and that's what I think is unsettling and silly
I like the functional approach, and as I said if I want to program imperatively I use an imperative language.
@BartekBanachewicz Because I don't care about what you care?
@FredOverflow in that case the exact game is Baphomets Fluch: Der Sündenfall
:D
@Jefffrey no, because for some reason you seem to think Haskell isn't about imperative programming
For me it's not.
Haskell supports both FP and IP, when needed.
And was designed with both in mind.
16:52
@BartekBanachewicz Ok, so what?
Can I not like to write in some paradigm using some language?
@Jefffrey That throwing away a huge set of possible solutions to problems without any reasoning is... well
I like to write functionally with Haskell
I don't care about writing imperatively with Haskell
@BartekBanachewicz lolwut
@R.MartinhoFernandes shh, don't go there please
@R.MartinhoFernandes do notation is an essential language feature.
16:53
@BartekBanachewicz nope
@BartekBanachewicz Isn't do-notation considered... controversial in the Haskell community?
well maybe, but the challenge that I like with haskell is to write a pure functional program
@BartekBanachewicz lol, that's why Haskell was designed with imperative programming in mind?
@R.MartinhoFernandes yes, precisely. Introducing a support for imperative programming style is enough to state that.
16:55
do-notation only looks imperative.
It doesn't introduce any of the important properties of imperative programming.
@R.MartinhoFernandes and that's all that matters, really
All those come from elsewhere.
@R.MartinhoFernandes like?
@BartekBanachewicz No, it's not.
@BartekBanachewicz Ordering for example.
@Jefffrey maybe the problem is because I don't consider writing in Haskell a challenge
16:56
@BartekBanachewicz good for you
Sounds like you like to smell your own farts.
for me it's a challenge to write pure functional programs
@R.MartinhoFernandes Actions in do are ordered if there's a data dependency between them
and it's a fun one
@BartekBanachewicz No, they're ordered only if the underlying data structure orders them.
16:56
I just think Haskell is a great tool, and I don't write in it because I like puzzles
I write in it because it allows me to write solutions I want to write.
But it's still just a tool.
functional purity isn't a goal on its own, it's a measure to reach a goal easier.
ohnoez
By virtue of being purely pattern-based syntactic sugar do-notation establishes nothing other than the syntactic structure.
someone doesn't do the same things you do
Maybe you two should see other people.
@Jefffrey not really. I just misunderstood your attitude
16:58
@BartekBanachewicz All non-syntactic properties must be in the underlying structure: if not the desugared form would lose those properties and do would basically be broken.
I thought you want to write software in Haskell
when you actually want to solve problems in a pure functional way just for the solving
@BartekBanachewicz yes, still in haskell though
@BartekBanachewicz which is a much better reason to pick a tool than "I WANT TO PROGRAM IN XYZ LANGUAGE COS XYZ LANGUAGE IS DA BEST YEAHHH"
I still want to write haskell code
16:59
I haven't said anything about code. I said about writing software.
3
There's an important distinction to make there.
Could you please provide some examples of this non-code software?
3
@BartekBanachewicz please do
I didn't say the software doesn't involve code.

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